Abstract:
The ephemeral nature of most sedimentation processes and the fragmentary character of the sedimentary record
are of first-order importance. Despite a basic uniformity of external controls on sedimentation resulting inmarkedly
similar lithologies, facies, facies associations and depositional elementswithin the rock record across time, there are
a number of secular changes, particularly in rates and intensities of processes that resulted in contrasts between preserved
Precambrian and Phanerozoic successions. Secular change encompassed (1) variations in mantle heat, rates
of plate drift and of continental crustal growth, the gravitational effects of theMoon, and in rates ofweathering, erosion,
transport, deposition and diagenesis; (2) a decreasing planetary rotation rate over time; (3) no vegetation in
the Precambrian, but prolific microbial mats, with the opposite pertaining to the Phanerozoic; (4) the long-term
evolution of the hydrosphere–atmosphere–biosphere system. A relatively abrupt and sharp turning point was
reached in the Neoarchaean, with spikes inmantle plumeflux and tectonothermal activity and possibly concomitant
onset of the supercontinent cycle. Substantial and irreversible change occurred subsequently in the
Palaeoproterozoic, whereby the dramatic change from reducing to oxidizing volcanic gases ushered in change to
an oxic environment, to be followed at ca. 2.4–2.3 Ga by the “Great Oxidation Event” (GOE); rise in atmospheric oxygen
was accompanied by expansion of oxygenic photosynthesis in the cyanobacteria. A possible global
tectono-thermal “slowdown” from ca. 2.45–2.2 Ga may have separated a preceding plate regime which interacted
with a higher energymantle from a ca. 2.2–2.0 Ga Phanerozoic-style plate tectonic regime; the “slowdown” period
also encompassed the first known global-scale glaciation and overlapped with the GOE.While large palaeodeserts
emerged from ca. 2.0–1.8 Ga, possibly associatedwith the evolution of the supercontinent cycle, widespread euxinia
by ca. 1.85 Ga ushered in the “boring billion” year period. A second time of significant and irreversible change, in the
Neoproterozoic, saw a secondmajor oxidation event and several lowpalaeolatitude Cryogenian (740–630 Ma) glaciations.
With the veracity of the “Snowball Earth”model for Neoproterozoic glaciation being under dispute, genesis
of Pre-Ediacaran low-palaeolatitude glaciation remains enigmatic. Ediacaran (635–542 Ma) glaciation with a wide
palaeolatitudinal range contrasts with the circum-polar nature of Phanerozoic glaciation. The observed change
from low latitude to circum-polar glaciation parallels advent and diversification of the Metazoa and the
Neoproterozoic oxygenation (ca. 580 Ma), andwas succeeded by the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition which ushered
in biomineralization, with all its implications for the chemical sedimentary record.